RIAMCO

Rhode Island Archival and Manuscript Collections Online

For Participating Institutions

Claire (Koch) Tholl Maritime Collection (1998.02)

Steamship Historical Society of America

Steamship Historical Society of America
2500 Post Road
Warwick, RI 02886
Tel: 401-463-3570
E-mail: info@sshsa.org

Biographical note

Claire (Koch) Tholl (1926-1995) was a professional naval draftsman, cartographer, architectural historian, and prolific author. She was born 05 March 1926 in Hackensack, New Jersey to Edward Albert (1898-1971) and Lizette J. (Ruchmick) Koch (1900-1980). She married Edward W. Tholl (1921-1967) 10 May 1947 in New York City. The couple had four children: Lisanne, Andrea, Robert, and James.

Educated in engineering and naval designing at Stevens Institute of Technology, she earned an architecture degree from Cooper Union in 1947. She worked as a draftsman during World War II at Pensacola Naval Air Station, Florida. She was hired as draftsman at Sparkman and Stephens after the war.

She was an early member of the Steamship Historical Society of America to remain connected to her lifelong passion for ship history, particularly the Hudson River Day Line. A passion likely influenced early in life by ocean liner travel with her parents as a child. She sailed March 1936 on the Monarch of Bermuda and in February 1937 on Prince Henry. The U.S.S. Ling Submarine in Hackensack, New Jersey earned a place on the Register of Historic Places in 1978 because of her research.

While raising her family in the 1950's and 60's, she worked freelance, developing skills as a technical illustrator, cartographer, and architectural photographer. The Hackensack, New Jersey local paper The Record featured her in an article titled "Housewife Historian" yet failed to credit her education, professional experience, artistic talent, and drive for historic preservation. Her survey work between 1979 - 1980 ensured the preservation of more than 200 New Jersey stone houses. Bergen County Historical Society created the trustee emeritus title specifically for her. Rockland County recognized her as Woman of the Year for her cartography work.

She described researching the past as "fantastic" and "exciting". If Mrs. Tholl's accomplishments as an architect, cartographer, author, and preservationist didn't illustrate a passion for historic preservation, her final wish certainly did: "In lieu of flowers, please make donations to a Historical Society of your choice".